Friedrich von Hayek

Friedrich von Hayek

Friedrich von Hayek (1899–1992) was one of the most important free market economists of the twentieth century. A member of the Austrian school of economics, he taught at the London School of Economics and wrote extensively on banking and monetary theory, the socialist calculation debate, and the theory of spontaneous orders.

He was instrumental in reinvigorating classical liberalism after the Second World War, co-founding the Mont Pelerin Society with Milton Friedman and others. Hayek won the Nobel Prize for Economics in 1974. Among his major works are The Road to Serfdom (1944), The Constitution of Liberty (1960), and the three-volume Law, Legislation, and Liberty (1973–79).